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Wolves (l to r) Anna Powers, Claire Lachnit, and Allie Powers ran strongly in Granite Falls Saturday. (Amber Wyman photos)

They’re headed for the finish line and picking up speed.

Coupeville Middle School cross country runners competed in their next-to-last meet of the season Saturday, traveling to Granite Falls for the 4th annual Mountain Loop Invitational.

While there the Wolves acquitted themselves quite nicely, with the boys earning second place in the team standings and the girls third.

Zipping across the 1.7-mile course, CMS 7th grader Henry Purdue had his team’s best finish, claiming second, just four seconds off of the pace set by an 8th grader from Cedar Park Christian.

Cyrus Sparacio (5th) and Anna Powers (8th) also copped top 10 performances.

Amber Wyman’s team wraps up its season next Wednesday, Oct. 16, when the Wolves travel to Langley for the Cascade League Championships.

Henry Purdue (left) and Cyrus Sparacio are here for all your medals.

 

Saturday results:

 

GIRLS:

Anna Powers (8th) 12:02.19
Claire Lachnit (23rd) 13:47.49
Allie Powers (27th) 13:55.17
Hazel Goldman (35th) 14:31.79
Abby Hunt (42nd) 15:03.17
Hailey Goldman (47th) 15:26.40
Mia Goers (60th) 17:17.31
Sophia Magdolen (71st) 22:54.22

 

BOYS:

Henry Purdue (2nd) 10:26.71
Cyrus Sparacio (5th) 10:30.94
Lincoln Wagner (11th) 10:48.93
Calvin Kappes (12th) 10:52.16
Colton Ashby (13th) 10:52.53
Archer Schwarz (17th) 10:59.27
Jonathan Kappes (23rd) 11:15.81
Jesse Kehoe (35th) 12:02.53
Jonah Meek (50th) 13:17.13
Hunter Attebury (53rd) 13:35.70
Magnus Western (60th) 14:07.70
Jonathyn Driscoll (61st) 14:14.70
Cole Van Dyke (63rd) 14:15.59
Nolan Hunt (70th) 15:14.52

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Johnny Porter, Coupeville’s top running back, found himself playing QB Saturday as options dwindled. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Next man up.

Saturday’s matchup between unbeaten high school gridiron teams took a painful swing for Coupeville.

Hosting non-conference foe Granite Falls, the third-straight 1A school the 2B Wolves have squared off with, CHS was without starting quarterback Chase Anderson and senior receiver Hunter Bronec.

Then, Coupeville lost the electric Aiden O’Neill and Anderson’s backup at QB and kicker, Davin Houston, midway through Saturday’s clash.

Finishing the rumble with running back Johnny Porter moved under center, with the senior making his debut as a high school gunslinger, the Wolves fell 43-6.

But while the loss to a now 3-0 Granite squad drops Coupeville to 2-1 on the season, the score doesn’t tell the complete story.

Missing their primary offensive weapon in Anderson, who had tallied five touchdowns across the first two games, the Wolves still jumped out to a lead.

And still stayed close until the second half, even with O’Neill and Houston exiting, leaving Coupeville with limited offensive options.

“I’m extremely proud of the guys,” said CHS coach Bennett Richter. “They played hard, and a lot of the time, played really good.

“There are a lot of positive things we can build on from this game as we move forward,” he added.

Richter praised the effort of everyone who saw the field — many of whom played out of position or inherited new duties with the Wolves sideline filling up.

Two, in particular, were freshman Liam Blas, who came up big on both sides of the ball, and Johnny Porter, a bruising back who found himself flicking passes when he wasn’t crashing through the defense.

He connected on a Porter-to-Porter pass with twin brother Jack at one point and kept Granite honest even with the team’s top two QB’s out of commission.

Johnny had a big game, and really stepped up for us,” Richter said.

Have a helmet? You’re going to play. (Bailey Thule photo)

The game started with Anderson in street clothes as he works his way back from early-season injuries, and Houston making his debut at QB.

The sophomore, following in the footsteps of older brother Dawson, a two-year Wolf starter at the position back in the day, capped Coupeville’s opening drive with a one-yard scoring plunge.

The Wolves had forced and recovered a fumble to start the game, then marched 63 yards down the field in 10 plays.

Johnny Porter carried the ball five times during that drive, but it was Houston who scampered around the right side and beat the Granite defense to the end zone to open the scoring.

While Coupeville was unable to convert a two-point conversion play, the defense was locked in and held the visitors scoreless in the first quarter.

The Wolves recovered a second fumble deep in their own territory, and later blocked a field goal try, but were unable to generate the same level of offense after the opening drive.

That gave Granite a chance to get untracked, and the Tigers responded with a pair of scoring runs from Rydon Kuahuia, before tacking on a third touchdown on an unfortunate play.

O’Neill, on his way to breaking off a big run on a kickoff return, went down awkwardly while trying to cut away from a defender, and the ball popped free and was returned for a defensive score.

While Houston and Malachi Somes stopped back-to-back conversion tries by picking off passes, Granite still had an 18-6 lead at the half, and O’Neill’s injury took a lot of the air out of the stadium.

Coupeville’s best scoring chance in the second half came after a strong kickoff return from Houston set them up at midfield.

But while the Wolves got down to the three-yard line, they were stuffed on both third and fourth down, also losing their backup QB after he got blown up while blocking for a teammate in the open field.

Granite tacked on a pair of touchdowns in the third quarter to stretch out the lead, then cemented the game with two more scores in the fourth.

The one thing the Tigers couldn’t do very well was add on a PAT or conversion after their touchdowns, with Coupeville’s defense stopping six of their seven tries.

Marcelo Gebhard and Jack Porter chased down Granite’s QB several times, while Blas and Marquette Cunningham knocked down several passes.

Coupeville hits the road for another non-conference game next Saturday, Sept. 29, when it travels to Juanita High School to play Cedar Park Christian-Bothell.

The 1A Eagles opened with a win over Friday Harbor, then have been manhandled in back-to-back losses to Blaine and Napavine.

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Davin Houston and associates are ready to rumble any day of the week. (Bailey Thule photo)

Saturday’s alright for football.

Thanks to a couple of recent schedule shuffles, the Coupeville High School gridiron squad will play its next three games on the weekend, and not under Friday Night Lights.

This week’s road trip to Klahowya was already bumped a day by busing issues, from Friday the 13th to Saturday the 14th.

Now, the week #3 game, a home tilt with Granite Falls, has slid back a day as well, moving from Sept. 20 to 21. Kickoff will still be at 7:00 PM.

The change is due to a shortage of refs.

Wolf fans can catch a doubleheader that Saturday, as the CHS co-ed soccer team hosts Grace Academy at 3:00, before football takes center stage at Mickey Clark Field several hours later.

Week #4, a road trip to Juanita High School to play Cedar Park Christian, is also set for a Saturday (the 28th), before the rest of the schedule reverts back to Friday games.

Maybe.

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Kennedy O’Neill explodes over the hurdles. (Ana Mc Fetridge photos)

Middle school track season is in full swing.

Two meets into the campaign, we have a ton of PRs and a fair amount of photos as well.

The pics above and below, which come from Coupeville’s recent trek to Granite Falls, come to us courtesy Ana Mc Fetridge.

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Wolf 8th grader Adeline Maynes delivered a stellar pitching performance Saturday. (Jackie Saia photo)

Adeline Maynes was ferocious Saturday, but Bella Frye was just a little better.

The Coupeville 8th grader struck out a varsity career-high 12 batters on the road in Granite Falls, but her junior rival came within one swing of a perfect game, leading the host Tigers to a 2-0 win on the softball diamond.

The non-conference loss, coming against a former league rival, drops the Wolves to 8-4 heading into a busy week.

CHS, coming off of back-to-back tough tangles with strong 1A teams, makes a bid to reclaim its Northwest 2B/1B League crown next week.

The Wolves, who are 5-0 in conference play, travel to Darrington Monday, then host Orcas Island Tuesday, Concrete Thursday, and Darrington Saturday.

Playing up against stellar competition in its non-conference games can only help a young Coupeville squad which starts three 8th graders and two freshmen.

Maynes may not be taking high school classes yet, but she more than held her own Saturday.

Striking out batters in all six innings she threw, the young gun finished hot, whiffing back-to-back hitters with runners at second and third to end Granite’s chances in its final frame.

The Tigers pushed across one run in that bottom of the sixth, thanks to two well-placed singles, but could get no more.

That gave Frye a little padding, as she had carried a 1-0 lead since the first inning.

The game’s first run came thanks to a two-out blow to left field from (who else?) Granite’s hurler, which curled away from the fielder, then got a nice bounce when it touched down.

Running full-tilt, Frye beat the incoming throw to give herself the only run she would end up needing.

Coupeville got out of the first inning thanks to catcher Teagan Calkins gunning down a would-be base stealer, her throw nailing the runner by several steps.

Between that first run, and the one which came across in the sixth, the two pitchers were lights out, with not a single walk issued, and almost every ball in play immediately snuffed out by defenders.

Frye, who struck out five Wolves, went through Coupeville’s lineup twice, retiring the first 18 batters she faced.

The spell finally broke when CHS leadoff hitter Haylee Armstrong scorched a single to center to start the seventh.

The fab frosh got all the way to third base, but that was it as Granite Fall’s ace ended the game with three consecutive groundouts.

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